Jane Addams, born September 6, 1860, and passed away May 21, 1935. Jane addams was instrumental in many controversial issues for a woman in her time. "Humanitarian and social reformer Jane Addams, born into wealth and privilege, devoted herself to improving the lives of those less fortunate' (Writer,P.D.,n.d.). Jane Addams went to school and was the first women to earn a degree from Yale. As a young woman, Miss Addams was not the conventional type to get married and have children. She felt that
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The Progressive era was a revolution because it changed the most important aspects in our society and they still mantain nowadays. It was dominated by middle class women, who had the initiative in fight for their rights such as the right to vote. The "General Federation of Womens Clubs" and the "National Association of Colored women" were created. It also shaped the modern American presidency and it created a State House Reform and one of the first progressive president Theodore Roosevelt heleped
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Abolitionists Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott attended the Convention but were refused seats on the floor by male abolitionists because they were women. As a result, Stanton and Mott decided to hold a convention on women’s rights. One important women to the Abolitionist movement was Sojourner Truth. She was born into slavery and endured many hardships before finally escaping with one
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The woman’s suffrage movement was successful in the transformation of American government and politics. The woman suffrage movement was about women standing up to the laws. These women sought out the right to vote, to be able to run for office, basically to be equivalent to men. This movement leader or primary contributor was named Jane Addams. Addams gathered followers to stand with her against the limited laws against women by creating social groups and campaigns. With Jane’s help, a new team
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During the late 1910’s, women did not yet have the right to vote, but suffragettes, like Alice Paul, began working toward a better America for women. During these trying years, activists for women’s rights endured numerous hardships and public ridicule. Slanderous propaganda suggested that women were communists. Some were tortured. Still, others lost their lives in the struggle. Few people understand the sacrifice made by these women, a sacrifice that ensured future generations of women
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respect and justice for the mistreatment she received not because she was a woman but because she was black, Elizabeth Stanton proposed the creation of a women’s organization, the America Equal Rights Association, which was conceived in the 1866 women convention. During The Kansas Referenda of 1867 there were disagreements between who would get the right to vote. Eventually, Stanton and Anthony started to take money from a very influential individual called George Francis Train who was a committed white
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American women who rented a stand for themselves and other women in America. Women were finally ready to face the men and state their belief about how men and women should be created equal. The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 was the first women’s rights convention in history. This convention lead and created by the founding mothers’ and their peers popularized this myth during the second half
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In January of this year, The Women’s March engaged the attention of the public once again. In 1913, the first Women’s March took place. At this time, the suffragists were marching for voting rights, civil rights, and economic equality. This march attracted over 5,000 women. In the early 1970’s the Equal Rights Amendment took place. The biggest march took place in 1978 in Washington, where over 100,000 women joined this event to march for an extension of the ratification deadline. In 2000, on Mother’s
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During the early 1800s until the 1840s, America was in the midst of social turmoil. Women’s right advocators and abolitionists were sprouting throughout the country, ferociously demanding change to the social system that was intact for more than 100 years. Among those who demanded for emancipation and denounced the slavery system, Theodore Dwight Weld was well known for his impasse stance on slavery. Theodore Dwight Weld was a leading architect and participant of the American Abolitionist movement
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Susan B. Anthony was a very influential woman in her time. She was determined to stand up for women's rights because she strongly believed that all people should be treated equally no matter the gender, race or religion. Susan was born in 1820 and died in the year 1906. She dedicated most of her time to giving speeches all over the country and organized different foundations to protect women's rights. When Susan started teaching in New York, she realized how unfairly women were being treated with
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